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PIN Scandal “Worst Hack Ever” & THE EFF HOUNDS

THIS IS THE VERY REASON WHY I RARELY EVER DO A *DEBIT* WHEN MAKING A TRANSACTION, RATHER I ALWAYS CHOOSE TO *CREDIT*, WHETHER IT’S ‘MY’ BANKS CARD OR A CREDIT CARD.

.credit one to my paranoia.

http://techweb.com/wire/security/181502468

The unfolding debit card scam that rocked Citibank this week is far from over, an analyst said Thursday as she called this first-time-ever mass theft of PINs “the worst consumer scam to date.”

Wednesday, Citibank confirmed that an ongoing fraud had forced it to reissue debit cards and block PIN-based transactions for users in Canada, Russia, and the U.K.

But Citibank is only the tip of the iceberg, said Avivah Litan, a Gartner research vice president. The scam — and scandal — has hit national banks like Bank of America, Wells Fargo, and Washington Mutual, as well as smaller banks, including ones in Oregon, Ohio, and Pennsylvania, all of which have re-issued debit cards in recent weeks.

“This is the worst hack ever,” Litan maintained. “It’s significant because not only is it a really wide-spread breach, but it affects debit cards, which everyone thought were immune to these kinds of things.”

Unlike credit cards, debit cards offer an additional level of security: the password-like Personal Identification Number, or PIN.

“That’s the irony, the PIN was supposed to make debit cards secure,” Litan said. “Up until this breach, everyone thought ATMS and PINs could never be compromised.”

Litan’s sources in the financial industry have told her that thieves hacked into a as-yet-unknown system, and made off with data stored on debit cards’ magnetic stripes, the associated “PIN blocks,” or encrypted PIN data, and the key for that encrypted data.

The problem, she continued, is that retailers improperly store PIN numbers after they’ve been entered, rather than erase them at the PIN-entering pad. Worse, the keys to decrypt the PIN blocks are often stored on the same network as the PINs themselves, making a single successful hack a potential goldmine for criminals: they get the PIN data and the key to read it.

In this case, Litan said, the thieves used the information to crank out counterfeit debit cards, then emptied accounts at ATMs. She estimated that they absconded with “at least a couple of thousand records, maybe more” and have cashed out to the tune of “millions already.”

The victim of the hack attack isn’t yet known, although some banks have pointed fingers at OfficeMax, which has denied that its system was penetrated.

Litan believes it much more likely that a third-party processor or terminal supplier was involved; the silence about the victim could point to a processor, she said, because they have the most to lose by the negative publicity.

Last summer, credit card processor CardSystems was hit with a massive breach that involved millions of accounts; CardSystems essentially sank under the publicity, and was later bought by Pay By Touch. In February 2006, the FTC reached a settlement with CardSystems that require it to adopt more stringent security measures, but the company remains open to consumer lawsuits that could mean millions in payouts.

No matter who is to blame, the bank industry is only about halfway through cleaning up the breach, said Litan. And more of the same is on the way.

“This will become a trend with criminals,” she bet. “Hackers will do this as much as they can” because it’s far easier to empty checking accounts at ATMs than to buy goods with purloined credit cards, then sell the goods to generate cash.

So what’s a consumer to do?

“Security is tight at the ATM, but point-of-sale is a whole other story,” said Litan. “Look at your [debit card] account on a regular basis, and don’t use a PIN-based debit card at point-of-sale,” she recommended. “I never do.”

>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>……………
in other news……………..

THE EFF [& YOU] TAKES ON SONY
The settlement process has begun in The Electronic Frontier Foundation class action lawsuit against Sony BMG for the flawed digital rights management(DRM) that Sony BMG released in millions of CDs over the last several years.

DMusic has been working with EFF to notify as may people as possible so they can get some redress against Sony BMG pursuant to the class action settlement, or alternatively, choose to seek compensation against Sony BMG individual in their own lawsuit.

Music fans who bought the affected CDs can submit claims for clean music. Many customers are also eligible for extra downloads or a small cash settlement.

SO PLEASE CHECK OUT http://www.eff.org/sony/ for more details about the settlement, including a list of the CDs affected. AND MAKE sure you don’t stick an infected CD in your computer – it will plant malicious spyware that is difficult to remove!

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IF YOU NEED TO KNOW EXACTLY HOW TO CHANGE YOUR COMPUTER SETTINGS, SO THAT CDs/DVDs ARE NOT ALLOWED TO INSTANTANEOUSLY INSTALL HIDDEN ‘GEMS’ WITHOUT YOUR KNOWLEDGE WHEN YOU PUT THEM INSIDE YOUR PC, CHECK HERE:
http://audiomind.livejournal.com/149551.html


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4 responses to “PIN Scandal “Worst Hack Ever” & THE EFF HOUNDS”

  1. genocidex Avatar

    thats rather amusing.

    couple things though

    dont most users have limits of withdrawals though. Like max 1000$ withdrawal a day.
    dont atm machines have cameras to watch the people stealing the money on them ?

    still amusing.

    1. shadowbunny Avatar

      I have to admit, even if someone “only took $1,000”, i’d be pissed. Especially considering a lot of banks (I know my bank – Bank of America) don’t offer fraud protection like that unless you sign up for a special program and pay a stupid monthly fee (which I refuse to do – they’re already making money off of holding my money for me, why should I have to pay more for the shit they should ALREADY fucking do?!).
      Luckily I never even use A.T.M.’s… I don’t even know my PIN numbers 😛

      1. genocidex Avatar

        i have fraud protection for free 🙂
        on my ccd as well.

        i like my bank 🙂

  2. shadowbunny Avatar

    I don’t know my PIN numbers anyways HAHAHA.
    As for the EFF issue…man…. the nerve of SONY! >:(

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